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FDA Finally Loosens Rules for Gay, Bi Male Blood Donors

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The FDA now recommends that gay and bi men be allowed to donate blood after three months of sexual abstinence, not 12 as previously allowed.

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting blood shortage, the Food and Drug Administration has shortened the deferral period for gay and bisexual men who want to donate blood.

Men who have sex with men should now be able to donate blood if they have not had sex with another man in the past three months, down from a year under the previous FDA recommendation. At one point MSM were barred from donating blood altogether, under policies adopted at the height of the AIDS epidemic and before there was a reliable way to screen blood products for HIV.

The FDA announced the new guidelines today. They are nonbinding, but such recommendations are generally followed by blood banks.

“As a result of this public health emergency, there is a significant shortage in the supply of blood in the United States, which early implementation of the recommendations in this guidance may help to address (even though the recommendations in this guidance are broadly applicable beyond the COVID-19 public health emergency),” reads a document posted on the FDA website.

Also, an email from the FDA notes, “Based on our evaluation of the totality of the scientific evidence available, we are revising the 2015 recommendations for reducing the risk of HIV transmission by blood products including: For male donors who would have been deferred for having sex with another man; the agency is changing the recommended deferral period from 12 months to 3 months.” This change will also apply to female donors who would have been deferred for having sex with a man who had sex with another man, and it applies to plasma as well.

LGBTQ organizations and many elected officials have called for the deferral period to be ended altogether, but they said today’s announcement represents progress.

“LGBTQ Americans can hold their heads up today and know that our voices will always triumph over discrimination,” said GLAAD President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis in a press release. “This is a victory for all of us who raised our collective voices against the discriminatory ban on gay and bisexual men donating blood. The FDA’s decision to lower the deferral period on men who have sex with men from 12 months to 3 months is a step towards being more in line with science, but remains imperfect. We will keep fighting until the deferral period is lifted and gay and bi men, and all LGBTQ people, are treated equal to others.”

GLAAD launched a petition in March calling for an end to the current ban following U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams’s urgent call for donations during the COVID-19 crisis. The petition has over 20,000 signatures, and members of Congress including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and Sen. Kamala Harris have spoken out. 

Ocasio-Cortez and House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney penned a letter Wednesday urging an end to the ban, saying, “This antiquated policy is not based on current science, stigmatizes the LGBTQIA+ community, and undermines crucial efforts to increase the nation’s blood supply as the United States grapples with the coronavirus crisis.” Major health care organizations have said the ban is based not on science but on discrimination.

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Trudy Ring

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